Skip to content
Tessa Hadley on What Decades of Failure Taught Her About Writing

Tessa Hadley on What Decades of Failure Taught Her About Writing

The New Yorker Radio Hour
22 août 2023 19 min
Ouvrir dans Clue

À propos de cet épisode

<p><i><span>The New Yorker</span></i><span> first published a short story by Tessa Hadley in 2002. Titled “Lost and Found,” it described a friendship between two women who had been close since childhood.  Hadley’s fiction is often consumed with relationships at this scale: tight dramas close to home. She captures, within these relationships, an extraordinary depth and complexity of emotion. </span><i><span>The New Yorker</span></i><span> recently published its thirtieth story from Hadley—a higher count than any other fiction writer in recent times. That figure is particularly remarkable because Hadley had such a late start to her career, publishing her first work of fiction in her forties. She talks with the </span><i><span>New Yorker</span></i><span> fiction editor Deborah Treisman about her long struggle to stop imitating the writing of others, instead telling stories authentic to her own experience and voice. “I was just a late developer, and I was trying to write other people’s novels for all that time,” she says. Treisman also asks Hadley about why her work has been labelled “domestic fiction” by many critics. The term is disproportionately applied to female writers, and “tends to have a bit of condescension to it,” Hadley says. But she is willing to at least consider whether her work is too focussed on certain kinds of bourgeois-family relationships. “I almost completely accept the challenge,” she tells Treisman. “I think one should feel perpetually slightly on edge as to whether your subject matter justifies the art.” </span></p><br/> <p>Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See <a href="https://pcm.adswizz.com">pcm.adswizz.com</a> for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.</p>

Écoute cet épisode en anglais pour apprendre l'anglais

Les épisodes de podcast sont l'un des moyens les plus denses d'absorber l'anglais au rythme natif. Tessa Hadley on What Decades of Failure Taught Her About Writing de The New Yorker Radio Hour t'offre des dialogues naturels, une parole non scriptée et du vocabulaire qui apparaît vraiment dans les conversations réelles.

Dans Clue, chaque mot de la transcription est touchable. Touche un mot inconnu, vois la traduction dans ta langue instantanément, et continue d'écouter sans casser le rythme.

Épisodes pour apprendre l'anglais

Plus de podcasts en anglais